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www.pwc.com/sustainability
Global forest and paper
industry conference
Malcolm
Preston
May 2015
Global forest and paper industry conference
PwC
May 2015
Slide 2
The big debate
Global forest and paper industry conference
PwC
May 2015
Slide 3
Global CEOs are increasingly concerned about the
risks from natural capital
Economic risks 2015
Failure of climateEnergy price
change adaptation
shock
Fiscal crisis
Weapons of mass
destruction
Unemployment and
underemployment
Asset bubble
5.0
4.5
Terrorist
attacks
Failure
of financial
mechanism or institution
Unmanageable
inflation
Climate
change
Deflation
Failure of critical
infrastructure
Water
crises
Natural catastrophes
Extreme
weather events
Impact 
Interstate conflict
4.0
3.5
Failure of national
governance
State collapse
or crisis
Man-made
environmental
catastrophes
Biodiversity loss
and ecosystem
collapse
4.0
Likelihood 
Source: World Economic Forum Global Risks Report (2009 – 2015)
Global Sustainability
PwC
Geopolitical risks 2015
Natural capital risks 2009
Natural capital risks 2015
Social capital risks 2015
5.0
5.5
Note: Man-made environmental
catastrophes was added in 2014
May 2015
4
And governments are pretty busy, too
The road to dignity by 2030: ending poverty, transforming all lives and
protecting the planet.
United Nations
Framework convention on
Climate Change
December 2015 - Paris
UN Climate Change Conference
COP21 . CMP11
Open Working Group Proposal
for Sustainable
Development Goals
September 2015
UN General Assembly
Global forest and paper industry conference
PwC
May 2015
Slide 5
17 Sustainable Development Goals
Poverty
Hunger
Health
Education
Gender
Water
Energy
Employment
Infrastructure
Inequality
Cities
Consumption
Climate Change
Oceans
Biodiversity
Society
Collaboration
Global forest and paper industry conference
PwC
= 169 targets
May 2015
Slide 6
Sustainable Development Goal 15 …
Biodiversity
Sustainable Development target 15.2
By 2020, promote the implementation of
sustainable management of all types
of forests, halt deforestation, restore
degraded forests, and increase
afforestation and reforestation by x%
globally
Global forest and paper industry conference
PwC
Sustainable Development target 15.b
Mobilise significantly resources from all
sources and at all levels to finance
sustainable forest management, and
provide adequate incentives to developing
countries to advance sustainable forest
management, including for conservation
and reforestation
May 2015
Slide 7
The Bonn Challenge
150 million hectares of deforested and
degraded land to be restored by 2020,
possibly leading to $84 billion in
economic benefits annually and closing
the greenhouse gas ‘emissions gap’ by
one-fifth
The Bonn Challenge has led the way for
new goals such as the New York
Declaration on Forests, a non-legally
binding political declaration to cut
natural forest loss in half by 2020,
and strive to end it by 2030
Global forest and paper industry conference
PwC
Every minute of every day for the
past 13 years, the world has lost an
area of forest the size of 50 soccer
fields. Much of it now has little
economic or ecological value.
39%
Primary forest area
decreased by 300 million
hectares since 1990, or an
area larger than Argentina.
Current net loss is equivalent
to about 200 square
kilometres lost each day.
April 2015: 59.2 of 150 million
hectares from 11 commitments
May 2015
Slide 8
Green infrastructure
Forests have a large role to play in green infrastructure and provide multiple potential benefits
• Job creation
Economic
• Land and property values
• Local economic regeneration
• Regeneration of previously
developed land
Social
Green
Infrastructure
• Tax benefits
• Social interaction, inclusion
and cohesion
• Increased life expectancy
• Improved levels of physical
activity and health
• Improved psychological
health and mental well-being
Environmental
Source: Forest Research
‘Benefits of green
infrastructure’ (2010)
•
•
•
•
Heat amelioration
•
Reducing flood risk
•
Improving water quality
•
Sustainable urban drainage
Global forest and paper industry conference
PwC
Improving air quality
Improved biodiversity
Restoration of degraded
lands
May 2015
Slide 9
Traceability of supply chains
The Board of The Consumer Goods Forum pledged to mobilise resources within their respective
businesses to help achieve zero net deforestation by 2020
The
consumer
goods
forum
The Board aim to achieve this through individual company initiatives and
working with key stakeholders.
Collaborations with stakeholders (including NGO’s, development banks and
governments) will create funding mechanisms and other schemes to
incentivise/assist forested countries to conserve their natural assets whilst at
the same time meeting their goals for economic development.
Key commodities for responsible sourcing include:
Soy
Global forest and paper industry conference
PwC
Beef
Palm oil
Paper and board
May 2015
Slide 10
GeoTraceability*:Building trust and transparency
Large scale data collection and traceability programs
Data inputs
Data hosting
Outputs
Origin
Visualisation
Traceability
Reporting
Traceability from forest to processed products enables:
Fighting illegal logging
Protecting Brand
Securing Supply
Certification and regulation
assurance
Trust from clients and consumers
Informing investment
decisions
Visibility of suppliers and risks
Resource optimisation
(right log for the right mill)
Access to selective markets
* Part of the PwC network since 2014
Global forest and paper industry conference
PwC
May 2015
Slide 11
The role of forestry in a changing world
• Will you take control or be controlled?
• What core competencies could you better exploit?
• What new innovation will emerge?
• How can forestry companies and industries (e.g. forestry
and agriculture) work together to reduce deforestation?
• How will government be engaged with forest policy
commitments and investments?
• What should partnerships between the private and
public sectors look like in the future?
Global forest and paper industry conference
PwC
May 2015
Slide 12
Thank you
Malcolm Preston
Global Leader, Sustainability and Climate Change
PwC UK Partner
E: [email protected]
T: +44 (0)20 7213 2502
For more information, please visit:
www.pwc.com/sustainability
www.pwc.co.uk/sustainability
http://www.pwc.com/gx/en/tax/newsletters/global-green-policy-insights/index.jhtml
Twitter @PwCclimateready & @malcolmhpreston
pwc.blogs.com/sustainability/
© 2015 PwC LLP. All rights reserved. In this document, “PwC” refers to PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP which is a member firm of
PricewaterhouseCoopers International Limited, each member firm of which is a separate legal entity.
Global forest and paper industry conference
PwC
May 2015
Slide 13
This presentation has been prepared for general guidance on matters of interest only, and does not constitute professional advice. You should not act upon the
information contained in this publication without obtaining specific professional advice. No representation or warranty (express or implied) is given as to the
accuracy or completeness of the information contained in this publication, and, to the extent permitted by law, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP, its members,
employees and agents do not accept or assume any liability, responsibility or duty of care for any consequences of you or anyone else acting, or refraining to
act, in reliance on the information contained in this publication or for any decision based on it.
© 2015 PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP. All rights reserved. In this document, "PwC" refers to the UK member firm, and may sometimes refer to the PwC
network. Each member firm is a separate legal entity. Please see www.pwc.com/structure for further details.
150427-163214-RP-OS
PwC
GHGs
Air emissions
Global forest and paper industry conference
Waste
Water pollution
Water consumption
Land use
Private Households
500%
450%
400%
350%
300%
250%
200%
150%
100%
50%
0%
Financial services
Petrol stations and vehicle
repair
Construction
Leather and Footwear
Retail
Hotels and Restaurants
Post and telecommunications
Government services
Machinery & Manufacturing
Consumer Staples
Textiles
Pulp and paper
Transport
Fuel
Chemicals
Rubber and Plastics
Wood
Mining and Quarrying
Basic metal and manufacturing
Electricity, gas and water
Mining non-metals
Agriculture and forestry
Value of environmental impacts
as % turnover
Agriculture and forestry – Top of the impact list
Average 15%
Average
May 2015
Slide 15